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Eating raw vegetables

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ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

maggiewinchester

maggiewinchester Report 24 Apr 2021 22:38

Ooo-errr :-D

Sharron

Sharron Report 24 Apr 2021 22:47

Oh yes, scrumpy!

A couple of years ago, I had some ale called Knights of Old and that would do very nicely. It was delicious and I want some NOW!!!!!

ZZzzz

ZZzzz Report 24 Apr 2021 22:55

Well I will settle for a vodka and tonic now, normal or what!?

LaGooner

LaGooner Report 24 Apr 2021 22:57

The last one I had was in Somerset and it was called crippled cock. Now wait for the rr'r to strike :-D :-D

ZZzzz

ZZzzz Report 24 Apr 2021 23:23

Bet they don't :-D

LaGooner

LaGooner Report 24 Apr 2021 23:24

We will see :-D :-D

Sharron

Sharron Report 25 Apr 2021 00:53

They would if I wrote it!

nameslessone

nameslessone Report 25 Apr 2021 10:04

Late night munchies leading to morning upsets ;-)

LaGooner

LaGooner Report 25 Apr 2021 10:35

:-D :-D :-D :-D. I'll reach for the Gaviscon just in case

maggiewinchester

maggiewinchester Report 25 Apr 2021 11:56

Of course,we ALL eat raw vegetables when we eat salad, don't we?
I mean,spinach is regularly eaten raw or cooked, as are carrots, onions and tomatoes.
But, we don't often cook lettuce or cucumber, but it's possible to do!

Arranging raw vegetables on a plate, with a dip, and giving them a French name may, to some, make them 'posh', 'more cultured' or from 'the other side of the track' - but they're the sort of people who would call a gravy or sauce 'jus'.
Giving the gravy you made from meat juices, that you pour over your Sunday roast a French name, is just pretentious.

Every country/area has it's own cuisine, they have their specialities and failures, and French cuisine (according to many, including the French) is vastly overrated!

I eat raw cabbage once I've prepared it for cooking.
As I'm snacking on it before my main meal, perhaps I should up my pretentiousness and start calling it my 'crudite' :-D :-D :-D :-D

nameslessone

nameslessone Report 25 Apr 2021 12:34

:-D :-D

LaGooner

LaGooner Report 25 Apr 2021 14:01

Sounds like something out of the Kenneth Williams song My crepe Suzette :-D :-D :-D

Sharron

Sharron Report 25 Apr 2021 14:32

I once had to get some fuel from a Tesco little service station on the way home and picked up a bag of carrots for tea from the reduced trolley only we didn't get to have carrots for tea and I didn't have room for much anyway. Gutbucket strikes again!

What is it with dips anyway? Does anybody eat dips at home?

LaGooner

LaGooner Report 25 Apr 2021 14:36

No wedon't Sharron, too much faffing about :-D

nameslessone

nameslessone Report 25 Apr 2021 15:12

The Fox isn’t in Winchester itself. A bit of a walk to raise one’s appetite.

Caroline

Caroline Report 25 Apr 2021 15:14

Hmm..... Maggie .....Winchester.....haven't been there for years what is the food like and how I wonder does it compare to other random places like London or Christchurch....

Sharron

Sharron Report 25 Apr 2021 15:23

There used to be a brilliant Italian restaurant in Bognor where you could have crudities as a starter.

A big basket would be brought to table containing all sorts of whole raw fruit an veg with some bowls of dips and a fruit knife so you could cut your own fresh pieces to dip.

nameslessone

nameslessone Report 25 Apr 2021 15:29

Being an Italian restaurant I bet they didn’t call it crudités.

Caroline, Rollo is almost right about Winchester restaurants but last time I was there we had a really good meal in the Crown & Anchor which is more convenient than the two referred to. I had had a really good fish soup off the specials board for lunch.

Sharron

Sharron Report 25 Apr 2021 15:57

I think they did call it crudities.

Well, you have to remember that it was Bognor and that was about as haute cuisine as they could cope with! I used to go in there.

maggiewinchester

maggiewinchester Report 25 Apr 2021 16:01

'The Fox' Winchester, well actually, 'The Fox' Crawley - not exactly in Winchester, hasn't even got a Winchester postcode, but then, RTR would pick anyone else up on that faux pas!

I'm intrigued about how/why you regard The Chesil as pretentious is it the set up - I mean an original old medieval building - how pretentious is that! Or,the food - which has really good reviews.

I'm sure there are rubbish restaurants in Winchester, likewise in Paris.

Which Asian restaurant in Winchester has gleaned your approval, RTR?

Is that praise from you, for my knowing gravy, or to be more precise, stock - which doesn't use gravy granules - in France is called 'jus'?
I also make my own salad dressing.
Aren't I a clever pleb?

How does your wife being French, and her father being a partner in a restaurant make her pretentiously French, or even, as implied, an expert on cooking?
I was talking about the pretentiousness of you directing us to a rather bland site on raw vegetables - sorry, crudeties.

You generalise about how the French allegedly take more time over/spend more money on food than the English - how do you know this?

May I also just direct you to this:
"In an international survey of more than 20,000 people in 20 countries, French cuisine was shrugged off as the most overrated of all cuisines. Even the French agreed - 28 Jul 2019"